Science Fiction Book Club Interview with Paul Kincaid February 2019 Paul Kincaid wrote an award winning study of Iain M. Bank's work. His writing has appeared in a wide range of publications including New Scientist, Times Literary Supplement, Literary Review, New York Review of Science Fiction, Foundation, Science Fiction Studies, Interzone and Strange Horizons. He is a former editor of Vector, the critical journal of the British Science Fiction Association. Lucius Sorrentino: It might be interesting to learn something about how he came to his socio-political beliefs and how that found its way into his writing. I think Banks was inherently left wing. Scotland has always been more left of centre than the rest of the UK, largely because Scotland, quite rightly, feels it has been second-best in the opinion of the British government. This was particularly the case in the 1970s and during the Thatcher years. In the late-70s there was an independence referendum for Scotland that came up with a pretty clear majority in favour of independence, only for the UK government to retrospectively change the rules. They said it wasn’t a majority of everyone in Scotland, only of those who voted, and therefore independence didn’t happen. That is something that comes up in The Bridge, and it is pretty clearly a defining moment in Banks’s political awakening. Then, under Thatcher, Scotland was always used to try out unpopular ideas, like the poll tax. There was a satirical programme on British television at the time in which Scotland was referred to as “the test bed”. There are several places, both in his fiction and in his interviews, where Banks says how much he hated Thatcher. And let’s not forget that his closest friend from schooldays onwards was Ken MacLeod, who was involved in several forms of extreme left wing politics, so that would have been an influence also. As for how these ideas found their way into his work, I think that Banks would say you cannot avoid putting your views into your fiction. Fiction is inherently political, and anyone who tries to pretend otherwise is simply wrong. And so the politics had to be there in everything from Walking on Glass to State of the Art. Martin Dudley: I've always had trouble envisioning the Culture Ships. There is a pretty low tech video in YouTube, but that's all i could find. I remember there is a book due out from Orbit this year with some drawings by Banks. Any comments or recommendations for images of Ships? I’ve not yet seen any of Banks’s illustrations of his ships, or a copy of the book (I’ve not seen a definitive date for when it is due out, it seems to have been promised for ages). Speaking personally, I can’t picture the ships either. Or rather, they are just such massive spaces that contain so much that you could fit any sort of structure or landscape inside them. And it is these insides that I find far more interesting than the outside. I suppose if I do try to picture them, I end up with something like the extraordinary ships you get in Babylon 5, only much bigger. Beth McCrea: What surprised you most in your research about Iain Banks? I’ve been reading Banks ever since The Wasp Factory came out, and I knew him well enough to go out for drinks with him, so I’m not sure anything surprised me. What pleased me was that when you read the books altogether, one after the other, you realize how much interplay there is between the so-called mainstream and the so-called science fiction, you keep seeing the same themes and images recurring. Actually, there was one thing that did surprise, which I only found in one interview, which is that Transition used a structure and a villain that he had originally intended to use in his previous novel, Steep Approach to Garbadale. I think that is the most revealing instance of the crossover between the mainstream and the science fiction. Eva Sable: Some authors are generally regarded as more literary, and don't get classed as science fiction authors, or, more properly, don't accept that designation. As Banks was both a Literary and Science Fiction author, did he have any thoughts on that subject, and is that distinction why there are "M" and "non-M" books? This is a lovely question, but a really big subject. Let’s start with the M and non-M. Iain’s full name was Iain Menzies Banks, and when he sold his first novel, The Wasp Factory, he wanted it to appear under the name Iain M. Banks. But he began to worry that it might remind readers of Rosie M. Banks, the very bad romantic novelist in the P.G. Wodehouse stories. So he agreed to drop the M. But Menzies was an old family name, and he got into a lot of trouble from members of his family for dropping it. Then came Consider Phlebas. His publisher was Macmillan, a venerable and important fiction publisher, but not one with any experience or track record when it came to science fiction. Banks was a critical and popular success, at the time he was probably their best-selling author. They were uncomfortable with the thought that the switch to science fiction might cause him to lose readers (a perfectly reasonable fear, given the attitude towards science fiction of the literary establishment of the time) so they asked him to use a pseudonym. He toyed with the name John B. MacAllan (after his two favourite brands of scotch), but in the end decided it was his chance to please his family by reinstating the M. Now, as for the difference between the M and the non-M books, I don’t think Banks considered that there was one. His first three books all had strong elements of the fantastic in them. At the time that Walking on Glass appeared, I was on the committee for a science fiction convention, and that novel convinced all of us that Banks would be an interesting and appropriate guest. So I invited him to come along, he did, and as a result dug out Consider Phlebas, which he’d written immediately after The Wasp Factory. The science fiction wasn’t so much as change of pace as just the next stage in his career, and after that convention he knew he’d have an audience for it. In broad terms the M allowed him to play around with what Brian Aldiss called the widescreen baroque, while the non-M could be more intimate, more personal. But that wasn’t hard and fast. Many of his non- M books (The Wasp Factory, Walking on Glass, The Bridge, Canal Dreams, Song of Stone, The Business, etc) had distinctly fantastic elements. Most, though not all, of the novels he wrote before The Wasp Factory were science fiction. And then there was Transition which was published as by Iain Banks in the UK and by Iain M. Banks in America. He enjoyed science fiction, but he enjoyed crime, he enjoyed contemporary family drama. I think he felt that he should be able to move from one to the other depending on what stories he thought of, or what interested him at the time. He was happy to call himself a science fiction writer, but really it was up to the readers to decide what labels should go on his books. Martin Dudley: His nationality seemed to infuse his writing. In his non-SF work, he often used Scottish settings, and his SF work somehow carried a very Scottish sense, especially of humour. I know he was pro-independence, did he feel his "Scottishness" helped his writing? Yes, he was very Scottish. I think he saw himself as a Scottish writer first and a science fiction writer or a mainstream writer a long way behind. An anecdote: I first met Iain not long after Walking on Glass came out, but before The Bridge was published. One day my wife and I turned on the radio and there was someone reading an extract from a brand new novel. We didn’t know who it was or what the book was, but we both said at the same time: “That’s Iain.” It was one of the Scottish barbarian passages from The Bridge and the voice was very distinctive. There is a strand of Scottish writing that I have called the Scottish fantastic. It stretches from Hogg’s Justified Sinner and Stevenson’s Jeckyll and Hyde up to Alasdair Gray and Irvine Welsh, but it also draws on ideas from the Scottish psychologist R.D. Laing. The Scottish fantastic tends to feature characters with divided or distorted identities, and characters who build elaborate defences against the world. Banks was squarely in that tradition (he has specifically named Gray as an influence, and Welsh has in turn been influenced by Banks). Of course it helped that Scotland provided a setting for most of his (non-M) fiction. And the typically pawky Scottish sense of humour comes out in just about everything he wrote. Cynthia Allen: I love his books. I do notice that he used the same idea twice - a man has lost his memory, goes on a quest, and then finds out what a monster he is. Do you have any insight as to why that was one of his favorite themes? I think all writers tend to get certain ideas or themes stuck in their head and it can take two or more books to work it out.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages6 Page
-
File Size-